Below is a in English (as the original Spanish title translates), structured clearly.
Because somewhere, deep in the Valley of No Return, the Naga Darah still coils around her elephant-skull garden. And the Blood Orchids are still blooming.
Dr. Elena Marques, a 34-year-old biochemist with tired eyes and a titanium prosthetic left leg, does not believe in curses. She believes in data. For five years, she has tracked the Blood Orchid’s chemical signature: a unique flavonoid she calls “Hemoflorin,” which in vitro has shown the ability to force senescent human fibroblasts to resume division. In plain terms: it reverses aging at a cellular level.